AI 藝術: Autumn

創作者 I_LOVE_ANIME

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Autumn
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Autumn

Autumn was born on a rainy evening in late October, in a small town where everyone seemed to know everyone else—just not what was really going on behind closed doors. From the outside, her family looked normal: a small house, a garden her mother tried to keep alive, a father who smiled and joked when other people were around. But when the door closed, the house went quiet. Not peaceful-quiet—heavy-quiet. The kind where no one says what they really feel. Her parents didn’t fight by shouting. They fought with silence. With doors that stayed closed. With tired eyes that wouldn’t meet each other. Autumn learned early how to move through the house without making a sound, how to hide her worries so she wouldn’t become one more problem for anyone. When she was 11, everything finally broke. One normal morning, her father left for “work” and never came back. No big argument. No long explanation. Just a short note on the kitchen table and an empty space where his shoes used to be. Autumn’s mother stared at that note for a long time, and after that day, it was like someone turned the color down on her. Her mother stopped cooking real meals. Stopped laughing. Some days she wouldn’t even get out of bed until late afternoon. Autumn started taking care of the house, doing dishes with hands that were still too small for the sink, folding laundry, heating up leftovers, pretending she didn’t notice the unopened mail stacking up on the table. At school, she tried to act normal. She laughed when other kids laughed. She did her homework. When teachers asked if everything was okay at home, Autumn forced a smile and said yes, because the idea of explaining the truth made her chest hurt. Her friends didn’t really understand. They noticed she was quieter, sure, but they didn’t know what to do with real sadness. They changed the subject, made jokes, told her to “cheer up.” No one was cruel—they were just young. So Autumn stopped trying to talk about it. She became the girl who listened instead: the one who gave advice about crushes, about parents who were “unfair,” about drama that felt big to everyone else but strangely small to her. She got used to being the one everyone talked to but no one looked into. Nights were the worst. That was when the silence in the house was so loud it made her ears ring. Her mother would sit alone in the dark living room, staring at nothing, and Autumn would lie awake in her room, staring at the ceiling, replaying the sound of the front door closing the day her father left. Sometimes she wondered if it was her fault. Maybe she wasn’t good enough. Maybe she was too quiet, too much, not enough—she didn’t know which one, only that something had to be wrong with her. One cold autumn afternoon, when the sky was gray and she couldn’t stand the feeling of the house anymore, she wandered into town just to get away. That’s when she found it—a tiny, almost-empty café tucked between two bigger shops. It didn’t look special. Old wooden tables, soft music, a few people typing on laptops. But it was warm, and it wasn’t home, so she walked inside. She ordered the cheapest warm drink on the menu and tried to disappear into a corner. When her drink came, she noticed something written on the side of the cup in black marker: “You look like you’re having a hard day. I’m glad you’re here.” Her chest tightened. The barista—a college student with tired eyes but a gentle smile—gave her a quick nod before going back to work, not making a big deal out of it. They hadn’t asked what was wrong. They hadn’t tried to force a conversation. But somehow, they had noticed her. She went back the next week. And the next. The barista started remembering her order. They’d ask simple questions—how school was, what books she liked, whether she preferred rain or sunshine. They never pushed her to talk about anything she didn’t want to. They just made space for her. For the first time in a long time, Autumn didn’t feel invisible. At home, things were still hard. Her mother had good days and bad days. Some mornings, they’d have quiet breakfasts together. Other days, it felt like Autumn was living with a ghost who happened to share her last name. Autumn needed somewhere to put all the feelings she couldn’t say out loud. So she started writing. She filled cheap notebooks with messy handwriting: letters to her father she’d never send, questions she’d never ask her mother, stories about girls who ran away and found better lives, poems about seasons and endings and that strange ache in her chest. Her words weren’t neat or perfect. Sometimes they were angry. Sometimes they were so sad she had to stop writing halfway through because her eyes blurred with tears. But when she wrote, she didn’t feel as trapped. One day, she saw a flyer taped near the café counter: OPEN MIC NIGHT – POETRY, MUSIC, STORIES – ALL AGES WELCOME. The idea of standing in front of people and reading anything she’d written made her feel sick. She was 13. Her voice still shook just answering questions in class. But the barista noticed her staring at the flyer and said quietly, “You know… you don’t have to, but I think you’d be really good.” No one had ever said something like that to her before. On the night of the event, her hands were trembling so badly she almost turned around and walked home. But she didn’t. She stepped onto the tiny platform that acted as a stage, holding a crumpled page from one of her notebooks. She read a short poem about being left behind. It was about a door closing and never opening again, about sitting in the dark and wondering what you did wrong, about learning how to stand up even when it feels like the ground has cracked under your feet. Her voice shook. She stumbled over a few words. Her cheeks burned with embarrassment. When she finished, there was a long, still moment. Then people clapped. Not politely. Not like they were humoring a kid. It was real. A few people even had tears in their eyes. Someone told her, after, that her poem reminded them of their own childhood. Another said, “Thank you. I really needed to hear that.” Something changed inside Autumn that night. Her father was still gone. Her mother was still hurting. There were still mornings when she didn’t want to get out of bed and nights when she cried quietly into her pillow so no one would hear. But for the first time, she realized that her pain wasn’t just a dead end. It could become something else—something that made other people feel less alone. She kept going back to the café. She kept writing. She kept sharing little pieces of her heart on open mic nights, and every time, it hurt a little less to say the words out loud. She made a few real friends—people who didn’t just talk at her, but listened back. People who checked in on her, who sent her songs that reminded them of her, who noticed when she went quiet and didn’t just let her disappear. Her life didn’t suddenly become perfect. She still carried all the scars that came from being abandoned so young, from growing up too fast. But instead of letting those scars define her, she began to see them as proof that she had survived. Her name used to feel like a cruel joke—a reminder of endings, of leaves falling, of things dying. Now, slowly, it started to mean something else. Autumn began to understand that her season wasn’t just about things ending. It was about change. About letting go of what broke you and making space for something new. She was only 13, but she’d already learned something many adults never do: That even the darkest chapters don’t have to be the last ones. Her story was still being written. And no matter how it started, she was going to make sure it found its way to a happy ending—one she chose for herself.

Kimetsu No YaibaKimetsu No Yaiba
#muscular female
#Slim
#Muichiro Tokito
#Tall girl
#long_hair
#teen
#[3d-anime-style]
#Realistic
#Curvy

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